ISKCON Birmingham: Book distribution and Harinama – Saturday 3rd…
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ISKCON Birmingham: Book distribution and Harinama - Saturday 3rd June 2017 - Birmingham City Centre (Album with photos)
Srila Prabhupada: A pure devotee always thinks himself as not-devotee. If one thinks that he is big devotee that is not good, thinking that he is first degree. We should not be puffed up. A devotee avoids it, remaining always in the second degree. Krishna has given everyone something extraordinary, and to serve Krishna with one’s extraordinary talent means successful life. Letter to Sukadeva, March 17, 1973.
Find them here: https://goo.gl/Y6NHh2

ISKCON Birmingham: Saturday 3rd June 2017 – Birmingham City…
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ISKCON Birmingham: Saturday 3rd June 2017 - Birmingham City Centre (Album with photos)
Srila Prabhupada: A pure devotee always thinks himself as not-devotee. If one thinks that he is big devotee that is not good, thinking that he is first degree. We should not be puffed up. A devotee avoids it, remaining always in the second degree. Krishna has given everyone something extraordinary, and to serve Krishna with one’s extraordinary talent means successful life. Letter to Sukadeva, March 17, 1973.
Find them here: https://goo.gl/Y6NHh2

Death: An inconvenient truth?
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Death: An inconvenient truth?
Life is like a game of chess – whether you’re the king, queen or pawn, at the end of the game everyone ends up in the box. Unless, of course, you get cremated. Morbid? Depressing? Dark? Though discussions on death are not usually number one on our conversation list, I was invited to the Southbank Centre a few weeks ago to speak on the topic “what happens next?” In an auditorium filled with coffins and somber lighting, I shared some thoughts on the logic of life after death. Living in a community of devotees, such concepts are seamlessly woven into daily life; birthdays are “appearance days,” my room-mate from Slovenia is “western bodied,” death is the “disappearance day,” and when someone expires we say they have “left their body.” Atma (the soul), samsara (its journey through material bodies), karma (the law which governs that transmigration) and yoga (the means of escape), are four pillars of the Vedic worldview. Comprehensive, consistent, and entirely logical.


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Sincerity Yours to Keep!
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Sincerity Yours to Keep!
Vaisesika Das: We come into the material world naked and we will leave it naked. As living entities, we don’t own anything, nor can we keep anything. However, there is one item that is uniquely ours: our sincerity. Sincerity cannot be stolen or usurped as it springs from our own freedom of choice to do the right thing.
Although sincerity is subtle and cannot be put in a bottle, it is the most powerful substance in the universe. It radiates from the eyes and hearts of those who have it. It attracts the favorable glance of the Supreme Lord, who is otherwise not attracted by anything in the entire material cosmos.


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Does chanting automatically make us kinder or do we have to strive to become kinder?
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When Tvashta gave Narayana-kavacha that made Indra invincible, how could Tvashta himself be killed?
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How can we remain respectful to the devatas while describing their non-supreme position or their non-ideal activities?
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Just as the mind is personified, are other things such as Bhakti devi and Kali also personifications?
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Walking Monk travels Highway 30. A Hare Krishna monk known as…
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Walking Monk travels Highway 30.
A Hare Krishna monk known as the Walking Monk, Bhaktimarga Swami has been crossing Nebraska by walking Highway 30 and Thursday arrived in Sidney.
Swami hopes to encourage people towards “an enhanced walking culture.”
“That means, basically, getting out of the house or the office and doing what our bodies are designed for,” he said. “It means greeting the elements and working your machinery, and also going for some reflective downtime, taking some time to process the things that are going on in your life.”
People, Swami said, need to “exhale a little bit.”

“There’s a lot of inhalation, but little exhalation,” he said. “Walking allows that to happen.”

Swami has done many pilgrimages. A native of Ontario, he has crossed Canada from coast to coast four times. He has also walked Ireland and Israel, Guyana, Trinidad, and the Fiji Islands.

Last year, Swami started in New York and has been making the walk to San Francisco. He resumed his travel in Seward, heading toward Wyoming in 20 miles segments.

Highway 30, Swami said, offers both a linear route and a sense of history, as it’s the first highway built across the country.

“It’s also the trail for a lot of migrants who were going for the gold rush,” he said, “and I believe the Mormons had also come from the east and gone to the west to settle where they are in Utah.”

The undertaking of a pilgrimage is an ancient practice, valued by many traditions and peoples.

“It doesn’t matter what strain you come from,” Swami said, “whether it’s a European one or an Eastern one, or a Native one, there seems to be a portion of people’s lives where they would actually go, on an individual basis or as a group, for personal healing, go for a downsized kind of vacation, and go to a destination that means something to the individuals.”

Swami has gained much from his pilgrimages.

“It doesn’t cease to amaze me when I’m walking these vast tracks of land,” he said. “It’s awe inspiring and it’s a very humbling experience. It’s like stepping into infinity, endless fields and beautiful rolling hills and the sky is definitely to no limit. That’s your constitutional position, as our Guru used to put it, to feel small but to do big. It’s taking a humble position and being ready to serve.”

He added, “Walking puts you into that service frame of mind.”

Traveling Nebraska, Swami’s interactions with others have been rarely hostile, sometimes curious and mostly kind.

“A lot of people offer that gesture of a wave. An officer pulled over yesterday. Before he even asked me a question he went to his trunk and gave me two bottles of water,” he said. “That type of kindness is there.”

How can we balance giving due priority to chanting with other important services?
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Finding Perfect Joy – A Lesson from St. Francis
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Hare KrishnaBy Radhanath Swami

In Italy, near the city of Perugia, is the place called Assisi, the birth place of a very popular saint named Francis. He was the son of a wealthy merchant, but he took up the life of renunciation. Committed to a life of self-imposed poverty, humility, and devotion, he attracted many to follow. “One day he was walking with one brother Leo from Perugia to a very famous temple, St. Maria of the Angel. He was walking for miles and miles, and it was freezing cold. It was raining and snowing. He asked his brother Leo, “I want you to write down whatever I say.” They were walking and it was already night time. He said, “What is perfect joy? If our brothers give excellent sermons glorifying our God, I do not consider that perfect joy. If our brothers give sight to the blind, they give ability to the lame to walk and to run, they give ability to the dumb to speak and deaf to hear, and even if they raise a dead man back to life, I do not consider that is perfect joy. Even if our brothers are so deeply learned that they know all philosophy and they know all the science and they have memorized expertly all the holy scriptures, I do not consider that perfect joy. Even if our brothers can prophesize what’s going to happen and tell the future and understand astrology and understand the intelligence and the mentality of all species of life and reciprocate with all species in that way, I do not consider that perfect joy.” Continue reading "Finding Perfect Joy – A Lesson from St. Francis
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Thursday June 1, 2017
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Sidney, Nebraska

Spurts or Pick-Me-Ups

“Hey, are you a Hare Krishna?” asked the husky, tattooed man at Legion Park.
“Well, yes, I am.”
“You guys were all over the place in the movies in the ’80s. I always wanted to meet one.”
“You’re in luck today.”
“Can I get a picture with you?” His son, Zack, took the photo and he told me we made his day. In reality, he made my day. I had one mile to complete to hit my target of twenty miles when I met him. The sun was strong. I felt divested of energy, but his interest in me and what I’m doing, gave me a boost. 
There are always these small spurts of interest that excite everyday. For instance, a long slithery bull snake coiled at the sight of me but I really wanted him off the road to avoid the disaster that many creatures meet under the wheels or the bumper of a car.
“Rattlesnakes are what you worry about around here,’ confirmed a state trooper, “and not the bull snake.”
Reading a sign outside a residence that says “Danger Men Cooking” was also something that excited me. 
Most important of all was a local eighteen-year-old Aaron, who joined me. It appears he’s at a juncture in his life and he displayed some enthusiasm toward what we are doing with the walk and our lifestyle. Aaron is an intelligent young man and is very philosophical. It was refreshinghaving him spend some time with us on the road. 
A special thanks to Jim and Jane of Chappell, who cooked for us, provided us with lodging, and drummed and chanted with us. 


May the Source be with you! 

20 miles

Bhaktivedanta Gurukula Vrindavan Updates
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Hare KrishnaBy Raman Raghunatha das

A historic event for ISKCON was the acquisition of 60 acres of land near NH-2 for construction of the new eco-friendly campus for Bhaktivedanta Gurukula and International School (BGIS) The construction work in the new school begun with the auspicious Bhumi Puja ceremony in the presence of HH Gopal Krishna Maharaj and former honourable PWD minister of UP, Shri Shivpal Yadav on 16th May 2015. A lot of progress has been made since then. A new exclusive road of 3 KM length named 'Bhaktivedanta Gurukula Marg' has been constructed by the state PWD department to connect the new campus to National Highway. It now takes only 20 minutes to reach the new school from ISKCON temple in Vrindavan The superstructure of the 60,000 sqft academic building has been completed, and the finishing work is going on. The superstructure of first two floors of hostel building has been completed. Foundation work for the temple building has been completed. Concrete boundary wall is being built on the entire 60 acres of land. Landscaping and plantation of trees are under progress. Continue reading "Bhaktivedanta Gurukula Vrindavan Updates
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History is made! After 44 years ISKCON Finally owns a Little Piece of Dublin!
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Hare KrishnaBy Manu dasa

One of the first devotees to land on Irish soil in the early seventies did so on a motorbike, with the intention of getting a slot on the famous TV program, 'The Late Late Show'. That devotee was Tribhuvanatha and being Irish, he knew this would be an excellent opportunity to introduce the fledgling Krishna movement to the people of Ireland. Although unsuccessful in his attempt, it would not be too long before the first group of devotees began to sing and dance on the highways and byways of Ireland. In the spring of 1973, Prabhavisnu brought a group of devotees to Dublin and they met with a good response, distributing books and chanting on the streets. At first they slept in their van, parked in the hills outside Dublin. Then they rented a bungalow in the suburb of Sutton and on Sundays up to 60 people turned up to chant and honour prasadam with them. Continue reading "History is made! After 44 years ISKCON Finally owns a Little Piece of Dublin!
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Sri Prahlada at Sadhu Sanga 2017
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Sri Prahlada attended the Sadhu Sanga Kirtan Retreat 2017 in North Carolina, USA. The Sadhu Sanga Kirtan Retreat is an offering by His Holiness Indradyumna Swami, one of the senior disciples of His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Srila Prabhupada, (the Founder-Acarya of the International Society for Krishna consciousness) to the kirtan-lovers all over the […]

Baladeva Vidyabhusana
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 Sri Baladeva Vidyabhusana (Sri Govinda Dasa) appeared in the 1600’s near Remuna, Orissa. In his youth, he mastered Sanskrit grammar, poetry, and logic. After carefully studying the commentries of Sankara and Madhva he took initiation in the Tattva-vadi disciplic succession of Sripad Madhvacarya. Baladeva Vidyabhusana became a dig vijaya pandit (conqueror of all opponents) and began visiting the holy places. Wherever he went he defeated the local sages, scholars, and sannyasis.
   In Jagannatha Puri, he learned the superexcellent philosophy of Sri Krishna Chaitanya from Sri Radha-Damodara Goswami, and took initiation after converting to Gaudiya Vaishnavism. In Vrindavana, he studied Shrimad Bhagavatam under Srila Vishvanatha Cakravarti Thakura and worshiped Radha-Syamasundara.

In 1706 A.D. Vishvanatha Cakravarti Thakura sent him to Gulta (near Jaipur, Rajasthan) to uphold the credibility of Mahaprabhu’s movement. The local Ramanandis (a branch of Sri Vaishnavas) were claiming that the Bengali Vaishnavas had no right to worship Govindaji because they had no commentary on the Vedanta-sutra.

 Lord Govindaji Himself directly revealed the Govinda-bhasya (a Vaishnava commentary on Vedanta) to Baladeva Vidyabhusana. Using it, Baladeva solidly established Gaudiya Vaishnavism as an independent philosophy. He also reinstated the Bengali Vaishnavas in Govindaji’s service in Jaipura. Govinda-bhasya is the only bhakti commentary on Vedanta-sutra.
In Vraja he serves as Sri Radha’s eternal maidservant Ratnavali Devi.

The Happy Vaishnava
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I used to think, before I came to Krsna consciousness, that now I would join a movement of very like-minded people and that I would feel very intimate friendship. Then, I was shocked to see that that person who I kind of detested for his views, he also had joined! 

No loss in devotional service
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(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 2005, Lecture)

Sometimes there are tests and we do not pass them. It means that we did not do our homework! Before a test, if you did not do your homework then you might fail the test even if it is within your capacity to pass it. In that way, we may fail certain tests.

If we have the means and if we carefully take shelter of the process of Krsna consciousness, then we will not fail our tests. But if we are not careful, inattentive and do not take shelter properly of the process of devotional service, then we might fail our tests and we might feel that so many tests are too much for us!

As soon as you start to take to the process of devotional service – even if you fail in devotional service, even if you fall down from the process or deviate from the process, then there is no need for any atonement, since all you have to do is immediately take up the process again and immediately you are situated again on the path. There is no loss!

 

Painting Deities with Srila PrabhupadaYamuna Devi: “One…
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Painting Deities with Srila Prabhupada
Yamuna Devi: “One day Srila Prabhupada asked me to paint a set of Radha-Krishna Deities that he was sending to Hamburg to have installed. When I informed him I was not an artist and didn’t feel I could do it, he said that he would show me what to do. So he told me to find a special black, white and red paint, and that evening we sat Them on his small desk and Srila Prabhupada personally painted the Deities and instructed me at the same time. I sat in front of him, and as time seemed to disappear, the lovely forms of the Lords slowly became manifest through the painting. After we were finished, I immediately went to my room and wrote what he had explained. He said that the painting of Radha and Krishna Deities is called Anga-Raga. Anga means ‘body’ and Raga means 'painting of.’ So Radharani holds her fingers in a mudra. Mudras can also be used by the Spiritual Master when he is preaching, and different mudras have special meanings. And Srila Prabhupada held up his fingers just as Srimati Radharani’s were—with forefinger and thumb together. Srila Prabhupada often used that 'mudra’ when he made a specific point.”

Harinama on a stormy winter’s night in Auckland, New…
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Harinama on a stormy winter’s night in Auckland, New Zealand (Album with photos)
Srila Prabhupada: One is understood to be an eternal servant of the Supreme Personality of Godhead if he considers himself a servant of the holy name and in this spirit distributes the holy name to the world. (Sri-Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi-lila, 8.16 Purport)
Find them here: https://goo.gl/xgkGsZ

Exciting Plans Afoot for Spain’s New Vrajamandala
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New Vrajamandala, a beautiful 300-hectare farm just outside the little town of Brihuega near Guadalajara, Spain, has flower and vegetable gardens, a goshala for cow and ox protection, and gorgeous Deities of Sri-Sri Radha-Govinda Chandra and Sri-Sri Gaura-Nitai. But like many smaller ISKCON temples in Europe, community members were facing challenges in maintaining and developing their project.

Does a good result indicate intelligence-guided action and a bad result indicate mind-driven action?
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